Effective immediately, Bill McCarthy is moving from Logos president/CEO to board chair, and our CFO Chris Migura will be stepping in as CEO. Please watch this short video to see Bill introduce you to Chris and to hear more of his heart for Logos.
Dear Mr. Migura,
Congratulations on your new role as CEO. As a faithful Logos user, I respectfully urge you to prioritize quality over quantity, especially in the Chinese-language library, including the Holy Bible.
Despite reporting persistent typos and translation issues, these concerns often go unaddressed. Such errors hinder usability and compromise the integrity of the texts we rely on for study and devotion.
If necessary, please consider strengthening the Chinese product team, as it appears to be significantly understaffed (significant/unacceptable typos in the Faithlife-produced Bible were left unaddressed for years). A more robust editorial and feedback response process supported by adequate staffing could make a transformative difference.
Your leadership offers a unique opportunity to restore trust and elevate the standard of Logos' multilingual offerings.
Sincerely,
Yiteng
Dear Allan - Thank you so much for choosing and trusting Logos as the home for your digital library. My team is assessing that resource now to determine the production timeline, and I will reply with additional information soon. All the best, Matt
Dear Yiteng, Many thanks to you for your commitment to Logos. I am sharing your feedback with our Chinese product team, and we are committed to improving quality and correcting errors with our content resources in all languages, including Chinese. All the best, Matt
Great post … good direction.
@Matt Bennett
I do appreciate your indulging this old codger and his pet project. I am always amazed with the liberality of this company and the form bending fashion in which leadership manages the interests of its customers.
Thank you so much,
Allan
Dear Alex,
Thank you for your feedback and for being a Logos user. While we do not have immediate plans to implement MFA/2FA across the Logos platform, we take the security of our users very seriously and invest heavily in protecting everyone’s data. Logos is PCI compliant ensuring our customers’ credit card and financial data are safe even in the event of unauthorized access to an account. Additionally, we regularly leverage independent security firms to systematically test our platform so that we remain ahead of any emerging threats. At this juncture, we feel an optional MFA/2FA authentication system would create an excessively cumbersome login experience for users given the multi-plaform (desktop, web, and mobile) nature of our products and would see very low adoption. However, we continually re-evaluate our security posture and may change our stance in the future if the situation warrants.
Thank you,
Jon
Hey @Jon Cage — thanks for the reply, but I have to disagree completely with the conclusion that offering MFA/2FA would create an “excessively cumbersome” login experience.
A few focused points to consider:
I’m glad Logos uses third‑party testing and invests in infrastructure security… those are important… but that shouldn’t be treated as a substitute for giving users additional account security control. Especially when they are asking for it.
TLDR: Users want the option for it, it only adds more security, do not assume adoption without testing it, getting a code sent your email/phone/app is not "excessively cumbersome".
and we are committed to improving quality and correcting errors with our content resources in all languages,
This sounds good, @Matt Bennett! I hope it includes also German resources. Among these, the most annoying shortcoming is the incomplete tagging of the Denzinger (see here), which is still not improved. The other most evident flaw is the lack of incorporating Müllers "Dogmatik" in the Catholic Theology section (see here). Both resources are top reference works for German language catholic theology.